Background Checks By Companies Spark Worries By Some
Background Checks By Companies Spark Worries By Some
By John Christoffersen
Associated Press
STAMFORD â Jessica Smith thought she was a shoo-in for a cashierâs job at an Office Depot in Minnesota last summer. The store manager was encouraging, saying he just needed to run a criminal background check.
But a week later, Smith received a rejection letter that cited a lengthy rap sheet, including drug convictions in Washington.
âI have no record,â Smith, 19, said as she flipped through court documents. âThey all say felony and guilty. Iâve never even been to Washington.â
Smith, who fought for six weeks to clear her name before eventually landing the job, was a casualty of one of the latest trends in business hiring. Companies increasingly rely on pre-employment background checks to ease security concerns and protect against costly lawsuits.
âItâs very important and itâs getting more important,â said Robert Belair, a privacy attorney in Washington, D.C., and editor of the Privacy and American Business newsletter. âThe incidence of negligent hiring lawsuits is way up.â
But the burgeoning field lacks consistent standards, causing errors that can disqualify reputable job applicants, some industry experts and consumer advocates say. When criminals slip through with clean records, the consequences are more severe.
Early this month, FedEx Corp was accused in a lawsuit of hiring a sex offender who was later charged with molesting an 8-year-old boy while at work in Fairfield. FedEx says a background check revealed no criminal history.
âThat person is either lying or Federal Express is wildly incompetent in how they do the background checks,â Neal Rogan, the boyâs attorney, said.
But experts were not surprised.
âThere are no standards for what is a background check,â said Tal Moise, chief executive of Verified Person, a New York-based company that performs background checks. âThis is an industry that has delivered historically a very low-quality product.â
A national task force funded by the Justice Department this month recommended national standards for screening companies.
âThe nationâs security, as well as on-the-job efficiency, and certainly civil liberties and privacy interests, all demand the development of a blueprint,â the task force concluded.
Background screeners say companies must conduct thorough searches to determine whether applicants have criminal records. That means searching multiple counties and checking for addresses not listed on job applications.
In the FedEx case, the employee worked in Connecticut but had a criminal record in Maine. The FBIâs criminal database is generally not public, except for law enforcement and some organizations. State depositories are often sealed or prohibitively slow, so screeners send runners from courthouse to courthouse.
âItâs very easy to miss it, even if itâs done properly,â said Mary Poquette, co-chairwoman of the National Association of Professional Background Screeners. âThere is no way to be absolutely sure the person theyâre hiring does not have a criminal record or a pending case because the records are scattered throughout 3,142 counties.â
A survey this year by the Society for Human Resource Management found that 68 percent of personnel officers said they always run criminal checks on applicants. Thirteen percent say they sometimes do.
The Privacy Rights Clearinghouse, a nonprofit consumer rights group that handled Smithâs case, says it regularly receives inquiries from applicants related to background checks.
âIt is a simmering issue and has grown in the last several years,â said Tena Friery, research director for the group.
Smithâs case involved ChoicePoint, Inc, which earlier disclosed this year that thieves had accessed its massive database of consumer information.
In another ChoicePoint case, a lawsuit is pending in Connecticut in which Randy Cruz says he was fired from Boston Market after a background check falsely turned up two felony convictions that actually were misdemeanors.
ChoicePoint declined to comment on Cruzâs case but said it resolved Smithâs case in about two weeks.
Other companies, including Wal-Mart, US Airways and even a movie theater, have been sued for negligence for not performing pre-employment background checks.
Massachusetts-based Trusted Health Resources filed for bankruptcy after a Boston jury awarded $26.5 million in 1998 to the family of a quadriplegic whose health aide murdered him. The company did not run a check on the worker, who had six felony convictions.
In the Wal-Mart case, Tarsha Perryâs 12-year-old daughter was in the cosmetic aisle at a store in Orangeburg, S.C., when a 48-year-old employee of the nationâs largest retailer repeatedly fondled her, according to a lawsuit filed last year. The employee, Curtis Scott, was a registered sex offender.
After the incident, Perry said her daughterâs grades dropped and she is no longer playful.
âShe doesnât like people too close to her,â Perry said. âShe still comes into bed with us at night. She still needs that security.â
Despite earlier allegations of assaults in its stores, Wal-Mart policies did not include background checks for most employees, the lawsuit said.
Wal-Mart said it began running backgrounds on all applicants last spring and now checks to see if employees are on sex offender lists.
Perry is lobbying for a law requiring companies to perform background checks.
âI was floored,â Perry said. âI would never have dreamed Wal-Mart had issues like this. I might as well take my children to a jailhouse.â